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Little did we know: JFK, nightclub performer

Even as memorials herald the centennial of John F. Kennedy’s birth May 29–reflecting on his enduring inspirational powers, his tumultuous term in the White House, the myth of Camelot and, of course, the assassination in Dallas–they might not get to this:

Kennedy, a World War II combat veteran seen as a hawkish Democrat while president, had to fight his most aggressive military advisers, repeatedly, to keep the country out of war.

What, as a young commander-in-chief, gave Kennedy the confidence to contradict these men?

Historian/author James Blight, CIGI chair in foreign policy development at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Ontario, says it was Kennedy’s prior personal experience with so-called experts, particularly in the military and medical fields, that fomented his distrust.

“Experts, to Kennedy, are bullshitters,” says Blight, ’70, who, ironically, is an expert on Kennedy. “Especially if they say, or if other people say, they’re experts.”

Historian/author James Blight, CIGI chair in foreign policy development at the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Ontario, says it was Kennedy’s prior personal experience with so-called experts, particularly in the military and medical fields, that fomented his distrust.

“Experts, to Kennedy, are bullshitters,” says Blight, ’70, who, ironically, is an expert on Kennedy. “Especially if they say, or if other people say, they’re experts.”

Dangerous times

So, a keen BS detector helped keep the United States from going to war in the early 1960s against Nikita Khrushchev and the Soviet Union.

In the Cuban Missile Crisis, all the Joint Chiefs of Staff argued for an air strike to destroy the missiles, followed by a U.S. invasion of Cuba. But Kennedy resisted the calls and the Soviets removed their missiles without any use of force. In Germany, a wall, but not war, emerged over the confrontation in Berlin. Kennedy made use of back channels to suggest that Khrushchev remove his tanks, promising that if he did so, the U.S. would reciprocate. The standoff ended peacefully.

“Kennedy was president at probably the most dangerous time in our history,” says Blight, who was an anti-war protester and scholarship baseball player at U-M. “There are these crises popping up everywhere. And any one of them–because they’re not crises with small countries, they’re crises with the Soviet Union–any one of them could have blown up into a nuclear war.

“It was Kennedy against his hawks. It’s Kennedy who prevented the war in the Cuban Missile Crisis. It was Kennedy who prevented this stupid advice he was getting, which was to blow a hole in the (Berlin) wall and tear it down and challenge the Russians right there and get it over with. It’s odd, but America elected, barely, a war hero, tough character, Irish politician. And then behind the scenes he spent virtually all of his thousand and thirty-six days fighting against his hawks to keep the country out of war.”

Kennedy had seen, during his Navy service in the South Pacific in WWII, that the decision makers often made bad decisions.

“The experts in World War I, he reads about them, they don’t know what they’re doing. And then he fights in the Second World War and he gets a visceral feeling. He knows these generals have no idea what’s going on out here,” Blight says.

Painful reality

Perhaps as influential were Kennedy’s experiences, dating back to his childhood, with experts who tried to treat his myriad medical problems, which included chronic back pain.

“His view of all this is: these clowns don’t know what they’re doing,” Blight says. “My father’s paying for the very best medical advice and service on Planet Earth and these guys tell you, you take one of these and this will happen. That’s crap.”

Yet it must be said that medicines helped Kennedy keep functioning at a high level, whether it was in making the crucial decisions in the Oval Office or thrusting and parrying with reporters.

“Another thing we all believed about him–that wasn’t true–was that he was really healthy and vigorous and all that, which was an act,” Blight says. “It was very carefully managed about what the public saw. I mean, here’s a guy who gave 64 press conferences–many more press conferences than most presidents. He was really good at it. He was like a nightclub performer. And he looked like one.

“So, before Kennedy goes out, he drops his pants and they shove a needle into each side of his butt and these are painkillers, and he takes the steroids orally, usually, unless the pain in his back is so bad he can’t walk. He pulls his pants back up and goes out and is probably one of the greatest actors who ever lived.”

An actor who as commander steered the country away from war.

The U.S. Senate has established a commission to honor Kennedy on the 100th anniversary of his birth, May 29, 2017.

Tom Kertscher is a journalist for PolitiFact of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. This article first appeared atMichigan Today.